Sport to start off with this week and a good-natured complaint about why all our bowls news is published in the Sports Argus and not The Argus.

It comes from Adur Indoor Bowls Club member Mr H Wood - no, really - who says we would attract more readers if we repeated coverage in the main paper.

The reason we don't is, quite simply, space. We do not have the room for it during the week, taking up, as it does, two pages in summer and one in winter. Before the Sports Argus came about, bowls news was squeezed into one page on a Saturday and was not nearly as good as it is now.

On to football and emailer "Lammy", from Brighton, who says says he has noticed our front page boast "Campaigning Newspaper of the Year".

"Campaigned for what?" he asks. "Don't make me laugh. Come on, get behind the new stadium and let's make Brighton a Cathedral (of sport) City. If the Sun was running our local rag, we'd have pull-out prayers mats and posters for our windows by now."

Well, Lammy, apart from the fact that some readers will be grateful we are not the Sun (nor a rag for that matter), you must have missed our long-running campaigns Bring Home The Albion and Albion For Falmer. As to prayer mats, don't make me laugh.

Incidentally, the award was for our campaign for a change in the law relating to children who die as a result of abuse.

Cricket, lastly, and David Bennett, of Hove, says he was "amazed" and "disgusted" to read in last Thursday's paper a misspelling of Sussex County Cricket Club's former president Spen Cama, who died last year aged 92. We spelt Cama with a K. Very sorry indeed.

Both Mary Shelton, of Hassocks, and Mark Dudeney, of Mid-Sussex Books, of Burgess Hill, enjoyed our 1932 aerial picture of Hassocks in last week's Extra but noticed an error in the accompanying words.

The village cinema did not close with the outbreak of war when, in fact, it enjoyed a boom time thanks to soldiers and Landgirls like Mrs Shelton. It actually closed in 1964.

Mr Dudeney also says we were wrong to say Hassocks began to take shape about 5,000 years ago. In fact, this only happened with the opening of the London to Brighton railway line in 1846. Thanks to you both.

David Cockram says he is a relatively new reader of "an interesting paper" but we nevertheless went off the rails with our story on Saturday about possible strike action on South West Trains, which suggested travellers between Brighton and Reading via Gatwick could be affected.

In fact, this service goes via Chichester and Basingstoke, not Gatwick, and the Brighton-Gatwick service is operated by Thames Trains, which is not under threat of a strike. Many thanks, David.

Finally, to this week's TV listings complaint, which comes from David Peirce, who says: "Why should readers have to get used to the illogical portrayal of the television programmes in an otherwise excellent newspaper to which my wife and I have subscribed for many years? In other words, please revert to 1,2,3 and 4." We might just do that, Mr Peirce. Watch this space...